NewsApril 26, 2013
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- A proposal to designate an operatic song by a homegrown talent show winner as Missouri's official anthem drew mixed reviews Thursday, with one lawmaker questioning whether anyone with a "normal voice" could sing it and another suggesting it needed some fiddle music...
By DAVID A. LIEB ~ Associated Press
In this file photo, Neal E. Boyd sings "Somewhere" from West Side Story with the Southeast Missouri Symphony Orchestra during a 2010 production at Bedell Performance Hall. (Fred Lynch)
In this file photo, Neal E. Boyd sings "Somewhere" from West Side Story with the Southeast Missouri Symphony Orchestra during a 2010 production at Bedell Performance Hall. (Fred Lynch)

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- A proposal to designate an operatic song by a homegrown talent show winner as Missouri's official anthem drew mixed reviews Thursday, with one lawmaker questioning whether anyone with a "normal voice" could sing it and another suggesting it needed some fiddle music.

Sikeston, Mo., opera singer Neal E. Boyd, who won an America's Got Talent contest in 2008, wants lawmakers to make his "Missouri Anthem" the official state anthem. The three-minute song references Missouri's "courage and strength," its rivers, eagles, dogwoods and pine trees, and proclaims "Missouri's the heart of a grateful nation."

When Boyd played a recording Thursday for the House Tourism and Natural Resources Committee, some lawmakers praised the anthem. Others seemed less than impressed by its orchestral and operatic qualities.

"I love the lyrics, but ... I'm thinking, in Missouri, we need a fiddle in the band," said Rep. Warren Love, R-Osceola, Mo.

Committee members ultimately decided not to vote on it, meaning it is unlikely to pass before the session ends May 17.

"I'm just thinking the average Missourian like me is not going to get up and jump up and down at that song, I'm sorry," Love told Boyd. "It's a little cultured above what a lot of us think and act."

Rep. Ira Anders, D-Independence, said the song seemed difficult for "somebody with a normal voice" to sing.

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Committee Chairman Donald Phillips, R-Kimberling City, noted that the legislation contained no mention of how to handle any revenue generated by the song or its associated gifts sold in tourist stores, though Boyd had said he wanted the proceeds devoted to education.

"Let's put this on the back burner for now," Phillips said.

Missouri already has an official song, the "Missouri Waltz," which received its designation in 1949. Recent governors have made it a tradition to dance to the "Missouri Waltz" during their inaugural balls.

But Boyd said he could envision the "Missouri Anthem" being sung by choirs, at sporting events, during TV tourism commercials and when the governor enters a room full of people at official events.

Boyd, who grew up in Sikeston, lost a Republican bid last November for a Southeast Missouri state House seat to Rep. Steve Hodges, D-East Prairie.

The legislation designating his song as the official state anthem is sponsored by Rep. Holly Rehder, R-Sikeston, who described Boyd as a family friend. She said the anthem would be a fine addition to Missouri's lengthy list of official symbols.

"I think it shows we are very cultured in Missouri, and we have a very wide array of music," Rehder said.

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